Ask RC- What causes a lack of assurance?

There are at least two different ways we struggle with assurance, two different truths we want and need to be assured of. The first is the truth of the gospel. What if the Bible is just the opinions of men? What if Jesus is still dead? This struggle is real, but rather rare. The far more common struggle is over this truth- I am a child of God. Our doubts typically are less about Him, more about us. We know He is faithful and true. We doubt our faith is true.

One of the sources of that doubt, or perhaps better, that fear, is the devil himself. I would suggest that even when the devil is seeking to tempt you toward some sin the end goal isn’t merely that you’d commit the sin, but that having done so, he can use it to assail you as unworthy of God’s grace (which is true enough) and outside of God’s grace (which is a deep lie.) Second, he uses hardship in much the same way. He encourages us to believe that if we had God’s favor our lives would look a lot different. We would, if He loved us, enjoy greater wealth, greater health, greater everything. Our lack in these areas is his exhibit A that we are not under grace.

A second source of doubt is ourselves. And that can be a good thing. When we find ourselves buried deep in grievous sin, it’s a good thing to stop and consider, “Am I a child of God?” When David received the report that Uriah was dead his conscience should have assailed him. He was a murderer and an adulterer. His assurance should have been plummeting. It should not, however, stay there. Grievous sin, like all sin, should drive us toward Him, should lead us back to the cross, and to a deep confidence in His grace, including His grace toward us. Of course we’re not worthy of grace. No one is, or ever could be. A person worthy of grace is a square circle.

The third source I’d like to consider is mysterious. It is something I know precious little about. What I do know is that more often than not, when doubt is present, so is this- OCD. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is a broad term describing that which drives some people to wash their hands over and over, others to never step on a crack in the sidewalk. The brain fixates on this or that, and is unable to escape. It can be the source of laughter, but it can also be debilitating. Where it comes from I don’t know. The cure for it I don’t know. I do know that I have had many conversations in which I am asked for counsel from someone who is afraid their faith isn’t deep enough, who fear they are not elect, who despair that they have committed the unpardonable sin. And when I ask them, “Have you ever been diagnosed with OCD?” they invariably reply, “How in the world did you know that?” Because the two, for whatever reason, tend to go together. And when they do, the sufferer doesn’t have an assurance problem, but an OCD problem.

God is always faithful. We never are. We are not repentant enough, trusting enough, obedient enough. Only Jesus is. If we rest in Him, we receive all that is His. One cannot “Rest harder.” One can only rest. We can all only cry out, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner.” And then we can go home, knowing we have been justified.

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The Feast- Where We Are; A Hero You Never Heard Of and Lisa and I Talk About Netflix’s The Crown


Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Lord, Teach Us to Pray

We’ve all heard the accusation. If God has already determined the future, what is the point of praying? This comes from our evangelical brothers, who, recognizing us as members of that species reformandicus bibliotechus, are looking askance at our pointy heads. We, true to form, whip out our portable blackboard, and start explaining about primary and secondary causality. We start talking about how the sovereignty of God encompasses not just ends but means. The argument we give is sound enoughy. That our response is an argument, however, proves their point all too well. Our response might be better if we were to get on our knees and pray. Too many of us are far more adept at giving arguments for the efficacy of prayer than we are at practicing the efficacy of prayer.

We’re not like the disciples. Our logic chopping isn’t worthy of the name until we string together seventeen premises, four sub-conclusions, cite three axioms, and end up with a conclusion that comes complete with a footnote citing Augustine before us. They, on the other hand noticed two things. First, Jesus had great power. Second, Jesus prayed a great deal. And so they, simple fishermen that they were, asked Jesus, “Teach us to pray.” Jesus, perhaps because He hadn’t yet studied the wisdom of Paul, did not speak to them about why we should pray. Instead He told them what to pray.

“Our Father…” He began. How mundane. Where are the lofty allusions to His sovereign power? After all, we’re not addressing the sissy god of the Arminians. No, Jesus begins by telling us to pray to our Father. Already our world should be crumbling down around us. God, our Father? How can this be? Islam believes it beneath the dignity of God that He should have a son. We, on the other hand, aren’t even surprised that we are His sons. What follows is a list of five (depending on how you count them) requests. Before we get to them, let us remember that we make these requests of our Father. What father, when asked by his son for bread, gives a stone? What father, when asked by his son for an egg, gives a viper? We ask with confidence, for we are the children of the King.

First, because it is of foremost importance, we importune the God of heaven and earth that His name should be hallowed. This is our highest good, because it is His highest good. That we are His children does not change the loftiness of His name, and we would be wise to remember that.

Next, we ask that His kingdom would come, that His will would be done on earth as it is in heaven. This, having covered the foundation of all things, that His name be hallowed, covers the end of all things. This is an eschatological request, reaching fully and ultimately to that day when heaven and earth will be one, and new.

Third, we ask of our Father for our rather literal bread. We remember that He is the one who provides for us, that our food is not ultimately the result of our own labors, but that it comes from His providential hand of blessing. We ask that we might remember that He is the giver of every good gift.

Fourth, we give what may be the most dangerous petition, what may amount to a maledictory oath. We ask that we be forgiven as we forgive those who do us wrong. Here God warns us against nursing grudges, while reminding us of our need for His grace. We know that we have been sinned against. His prayer recalls to our memory that we sin against others.

Finally we ask this, that God would be pleased to not lead us into temptation, that He would keep us safe from the snares of the evil one. Note what is missing from this prayer. Jesus does not instruct us here that we should pray for our political leaders. Such is mentioned elsewhere in Scripture, but it does not make Jesus’ model prayer. We are not told to pray for our health, yet in most churches one could easily confuse the contents of the prayer chain with the roll call at the local hospital. Once again Scripture elsewhere does encourage us to pray for the sick, but not here. We are not told to pray for that promotion at work, or the bonus we’ve been hoping for. Nor are we told to pray, at least here, that our name might be vindicated. The discrepancy between the prayer of our Lord, and the prayers of His disciples is telling. It contrasts our priorities with His priorities. We want to be healthy, wealthy and happy. He wants us to be holy.

If we want to have our prayers answered in the affirmative, we need to ask for those things that God is pleased to give us. When we pray, “Lord won’t you buy me a Mercedes Benz” the answer will probably be “No.” If, on the other hand, we pray that His kingdom will come, we can pray with confidence that He will indeed bring this to pass.

What will His kingdom look like? The prayer tells us. His kingdom is come where His will is done. There is then no tension between praying for big things like the kingdom and praying for little things, like not being tempted. There is no tension between praying for God’s goals, like that His kingdom would come, and our goals, like not being tempted. There is, in short, no tension between personal piety and the social gospel. All things will be made right, when I am made right. Every knee will bow and every tongue confess when my knee bows and my tongue confesses. There is no tension between looking inward and looking outward. Let there be peace on earth, the song used to say, and let it begin with me. His kingdom will come when His bride is made ready. She will be ready when I am washed of my sins.

So we ought to pray. We ought, as Jesus taught us, to pray with fervor, with purpose, with knee numbing zeal, that we would fall not into temptation. This in turn requires that we pray that we not be tempted to lie to ourselves. We are experts at measuring the importance of a particular sin in direct proportion to its distance from us. We think sodomy a grave sin and gossip a comparative peccadillo precisely because the thought of the one turns our stomach, and the thought of the other sets our tongues to salivating. If you want to know what sins you find most tempting, one way to discover such might be to measure what sins you find yourself repenting of with frequency. If I find myself losing patience regularly, would it not be prudent to pray that God, as He makes me bear the fruit of patience, would keep me from circumstances where my potential sin becomes actual?

Our prayers need to recognize the world we live in, and the battles we wage. We are at war with the world, the flesh and the devil. Temptation and its handmaiden the devil are real enough that Jesus taught us to pray against them. May we have the wisdom to pray that we might learn to pray aright. We need to have the passion of our Husband, that we would be washed clean.

Perhaps the greatest temptation the devil has given us is that we would forget that we are at war. He has seduced us into believing that the kingdom will grow as we do all that we can to disguise that which makes us distinct from the world around us. If we dress like them, talk like them, live like them, maybe the world will find its way into the kingdom. Quite apart from how this puts our light under the bushel leaving the lost in the dark, it further besmirches the bride. We are called to be set apart, distinct, holy, separate. Lead us not into temptation.

The clichéd sit-com gag of the devil on one shoulder and the angel on the other, like most clichés, became a cliché because it has a ring of truth. We must discern the voice of the Master from the hissing of the serpent. He does tempt us, and so we must be on our guard. He wants us to think, to feel to act as he would. If we would live in the Word, rather than the world, then we would better hear His voice. And His Word tells us to pray, deliver us from the Evil One.

We seek His glory, by His grace. We seek His kingdom, by His grace. This is why we must fight the wiles of the serpent. We want our Captain, our King, to behold a bride that perfectly reflects the radiance of His glory, even as He is the express image of the glory of the Father. This is why He came. This is why He spoke to us the words of life. This is why He died. This is why, in turn, death could not hold Him, and He burst forth from the tomb. This too is why He ascended on high. He who ascended will come down once more and all things will be made right. Then we will face no more temptation. Then the devil will be cast into the lake of fire. And we will dance. For His is the kingdom, and the power and the glory, now and forever. Amen.

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Ask RC- How should we understand the promise Jesus makes in John 14:14, “If you ask anything in My name I will do it?”

My book, Believing God, was written with a single goal in mind, to help believers enter more fully into the promises of God. Even we who affirm that God’s Word is always true still struggle to believe that if we ask for wisdom He will give it to us (James 1:5), that children are a blessing from the Lord (Psalm 127), that we will be like Him for we shall see Him as He is (I John 3:4). Having pushed for greater faith, greater confidence, what ought I to say about this promise, that honestly on its face looks to over-promise?

We have a number of caveats that at least seek to place limits on what Jesus must have meant. We affirm, for instance, that, “In My name” at least excludes our more crass requests. Janis Joplin was not standing on solid exegetical grounds when she prayed, “Lord won’t you buy me a Mercedes-Benz.”

But what about when we are asking for things we know God would approve of? In our home Lisa and I pray regularly that God would be pleased to help us to grow in grace and wisdom. What we are seeking is that we would be made fully into the image of Christ, that our sanctification would be complete. That sounds like a good thing to ask in Jesus name. Second, we pray often that God would be pleased to magnify His name, bringing into His kingdom this friend, that co-worker, this other neighbor. How could that not be a prayer in His name? And yet, thus far our prayers have not been answered.

The reason the prayers haven’t been answered is not too complex. God has determined to glorify His name in the battles, in my pursuit of godliness, in my repentance for my failure. He has determined to glorify His name in the battle over souls. He certainly could end all of history whenever He wishes, making all things right. But such is clearly not His will.

The more difficult question then, given His will in not to complete history now, is what did Jesus mean when He said that what we ask in His name He would grant? My answer is this- He will so grant. My heart’s desire is that I would be like Him. And He is busy making that happen. My heart’s desire is that all those who are His will come into the kingdom. And He is busy making that happen. A day will come when both of these desires will come to pass. Jesus is moving history forward to that day.

These two principles come together when we remember the fullness of what it means to pray in Christ’s name- it is to seek, ultimately, the one thing He is seeking, the glory of God. My sanctification, even the redemption of others, these are proximate goals, subservient to the greatest goal, that God would be glorified. Which is why, in the end, every time we pray in His name we pray with His humble submission- Nevertheless not my will but Thine be done.

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Tasting Eternity, The Covenant of Life and Fairy Dust

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Who’s Your Daddy?

The world, too often with help from the Christian church, is intent on removing from the world all of its wonder. We may see the universe as a plenty amazing machine. But even the most amazing machine is cold to the touch, and can’t touch us back. The glory of creation, of God speaking galaxies into existence has been replaced in the world’s thinking with natural selection, the brutal and banal motor of progress given us by Darwin. Every man has ceased to be an image bearer of God most high, and has become instead the product of genetic determination or the product of his environment. Nature and nurture turn us all into Stretch Armstrong until we break. History has ceased to be that stage upon which God manifests His glory and has instead become random, aimless, a tale full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

It strikes me that the world, and we must always remember that such once were we, and even now we are to be about the business of putting to death that which remains in us that is of the world, is like a cynical teenager, eager to show his own wisdom through giving vent to skepticism. So, ashamed of his past innocence, he hides and stays awake deep into the night, waiting for Santa Claus to come. As he hears the first rustle of a present being put under the tree he leaps into the room, switches on the light with an angry, “A-HA!” The father blinks, and is heartbroken to have the truth exposed. He’s just a man pretending to be something he’s not. The son’s joy of discovery swiftly descends into ennui; this is all there is, men dressing up to be better than they are.

Our story, however, is different. We may struggle with doubts. We may battle our own cynicism. We may even find ourselves waiting to expose the truth one Christmas Eve. When, however, we hear that rustling present and switch on the light we find not that Santa Claus is really just our father, but that our Father is the real Santa Claus. We find in the truth not a letdown, but that we are surprised by joy. Beneath the red suit, under the white beard is the One who brought us into this world. And the one who brought into being this world. The reason He knows when we’ve been bad or good is because He knows all things. Our Father really does live in a distant land, pure as the driven snow. He brings us gifts all day every day, but none better than that which He sent at Christmas.

Because our Father is Santa Claus, because the gift for the Magi walked out of the tomb alive we have no need to fear the world. It’s His. It belongs to our Daddy, and we are His heirs. Indeed we have no need to overcome the world. He, after all, has already overcome the world (John 16:33). Who’s my daddy? Santa Claus.

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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, God’s Self-Existence and More…

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything

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Ask RC- What warnings from the Bible are we most prone to overlook?

CS Lewis, in his essay On the Reading of Old Books, affirms the obvious truth that every age is given to peculiar blind spots. When we read the Puritans we will see them. When we read Athanasius, (Lewis’ essay was written originally as a foreword for Athanasius’ classic work On the Incarnation) we will see them. When we read from our own age, we are much less likely to see them. We are able to see the blind spots of others, but blind to our own. That’s pretty much what “blind spot” means.

The Bible, of course, transcends differing eras, but in different eras we are likely to have differing blind spots toward the Bible. We have, for instance, in huge swaths of the evangelical church, a sexual ethic that says something like, “Let not unwed pregnancy be named once among you.” Fornication, no problem. Impregnation, big problem.

That said I would suggest worse still in our age is our seemingly utter disregard for warning against the sins of the tongue. This is, after all, the information age. We value information, access to “news” and value not a wit the privacy of others. Even less are we concerned with Biblical categories of evidence and justice. Mere accusations, and those even from anonymous bloggers, are enough to ruin the reputation of others. Have you heard?

This week the evangelical corner of the interwebs is abuzz about a legal challenge being faced not by a Christian celebrity pastor, but by the son of a Christian celebrity pastor. Some seem to have overlooked the biblical warning,

Do not rejoice when your enemy falls,
And do not let your heart be glad when he stumbles;
Lest the Lord see it, and [c]it displease Him,
And He turn away His wrath from him (: 17, 18).

Others are rightly praying over the situation, but wrongly talking about it. Gossip isn’t merely speaking untruths about others. It also includes speaking when the truth isn’t known. See Proverbs18:13 – He who answers a matter before he hears it; it is folly and shame to him. There is, however, a third category to gossip. We gossip when we speak untruths about others. We gossip when we speak what we do not know for certain about others. We also gossip, however, when we speak what we do know for certain, but have no stake in the matter. This man’s issues with the law are no concern of mine. It is no concern to 99% of those who felt the need to weigh in on it on the internet. It is no concern to 99.999999% of those who read those who weighed in on the matter.

I’ve seen my own scandals and those of many dear friends play out on the internet. I’ve seen discernment bloggers, mommy bloggers, and countless ordinary social media users speed right past the Bible’s warnings. Some of these people I’ve seen pulled over for speeding. Some I’ve seen stuck in a ditch. Others I’ve seen drive right over the cliff. Whether it is my own sins, or the sins of others, one thing we know for certain- God will not be mocked. And mocking those for whom He sent His Son is mocking Him.

The world, and the Word are both filled with things God invites us to talk about. We are to encourage one another in our walk. We are to bear one another’s burdens. We are to praise His holy name. We are to gently correct one another, mindful of our own danger in falling. We are to do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with our God. We can start by walking humbly with each other.

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ABCs of Theology- Sacraments; I Know a Little Greek- Plato; Half Truths- All Sins Are Equal

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 14- We must stop building megachurches, and start worshipping with our neighbors.

There is a revealing paradox about large crowds. The bigger the crowd we find ourselves in, the more anonymous we become. The man who lives in a high rise apartment building in a metropolis is more invisible than a rural farmer living on a hundred acre farm. Which is one reason that mega-churches are so popular in our day. They provide an opportunity for the believer to come and consume his Christian faith in relative anonymity. If he misses a Sunday or ten, no one will ever notice. The consumer in this context can take in the finest music, vibrant preaching, and a plethora of programs. What tends to be lacking is what is most needful- connectedness and accountability.

There are any number of advantages that come with large churches. Such institutions tend to be in a strong financial position. A large church can send out missionaries without in turn requiring the missionaries to visit dozens of churches to raise their support. Large churches can build glorious buildings that remind worshippers of the glory of God, and remind those outside of the presence of the church. For all these advantages, however, they too often fail to create disciples.

First, large churches tend to embrace a market perspective. They not only adopt a business mindset, but cater to the consumer mentality of the layman. Programs become benefits the church offers. Locations are chosen for convenience. What is lost is the opportunity to worship with our neighbors. With what used to be known as the “parish system” Christians met at the church close to home. Before the advent of the automobile and the interstate system, we worshipped near where we lived, which meant in turn that we worshipped with our neighbors.

Second, large churches tend to separate our “Sunday” lives from the rest of our lives. We have one group of friends that we see during the workweek, and a different group that we mingle with on the Lord’s Day. With a parish system we worship with the people we see during the rest of the week. When there is but one circle of friends, it is all that more difficult to separate our faith from our lives.

Third, large churches tend to institutionalize ministry. This is the result both of the desire to create programs that will draw more people in, and the efficiency needed in such large groups. When a family is in need, committee chairs must be notified to get the machinery running. With a parish system, however, neighbors are in a position to help one another. We do not sit down beside a stranger on Sunday morning, and pray for people in the abstract. Instead we sit beside the mom whose husband has been unfaithful, whose children play with our own children. We know about her need for firewood because we actually visit her house from time to time.

Megachurches are built on anonymity. Parish churches are built on community. The former encourages us to take, the latter to give. Megachurches tend to promote celebrity pastors. Parish churches tend to promote mutual service. With parish churches we can actually “one another” with our neighbors. And our neighbors can “one another” with us.

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